Desulfobacter hydrogenophilus
Desulfobacter hydrogenophilus | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | |
Phylum: | Thermodesulfobacteriota |
Class: | Desulfobacteria |
Order: | |
Family: | |
Genus: | |
Species: | D. hydrogenophilus |
Binomial name | |
Desulfobacter hydrogenophilus Widdell, 1987 | |
Desulfobacter hydrogenophilus is a strictly anaerobic sulfate-reducing bacterium. It was isolated and characterized in 1987 by Friedrich Widdel of the University of Konstanz (Germany). Like most sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), D. hydrogenophilus is capable of completely oxidizing organic compounds (specifically acetate, pyruvate and ethanol) to CO2, and therefore plays a key role in biomineralization in anaerobic marine environments. However, unlike many SRB, D. hydrogenophilus is a facultative lithoautotroph, and can grow using H2 as an electron donor and CO2 as a carbon source. D. hydrogenophilus is also unique because it is psychrophilic (and has been shown to grow at temperatures as low as 0 °C or 32 °F). It is also diazotrophic, or capable of fixing nitrogen.